Setting targets in student learning objectives
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Setting Targets in Student Learning Objectives
SLOs 3 A B A CONCEPTUAL UNDERSTANDING OF TARGET-SETTING AS PART OF THE SLO PROCESS WHAT IS A TARGET AND WHY IS SETTING ONE AN ESSENTIAL PART OF THE SLO PROCESS? The third essential question prompts educators to articulate the level of content knowledge or skills that are critical for students to develop while in the educator’s class; this is the target(s). Writing a target involves defining the level of content knowledge and skills that students will have at the end of the interval of instruction. A target is not simply a test score. A target may be expressed as a score on an assessment but that score must represent a level of performance that reflects students’ performance on critical content knowledge and skills. Only after you define the knowledge and skills that students will develop can you find or create the right evidence source to allow students to demonstrate these knowledge and skills, along with defining cut scores, if necessary. Furthermore, There must be a target for each student in the class represented by the SLO; The target should be measurable; and The target should be rigorous yet attainable for the interval of instruction; in most cases, the target should be tiered to reflect students’ differing baselines. At its most basic, target setting for SLOs occurs when educators describe where students are, in regards to the prioritized content knowledge or skills, at the beginning of the interval of instruction (Point A) and then name a goal for where students will be in regards to that knowledge and skills at the end of the interval of instruction (Point B). One Rhode Island school leader described the SLO process and the act of setting targets as follows: “An SLO is nothing more than a roadmap. We have a destination but there are pits and stops along the way where you pull over and use the map to reflect and to redirect where necessary so that you can get to that destination.” In order to set rigorous but realistic targets, you need at least a basic idea of where students are starting; that is baseline data. Tool #2 in the Assessment Toolkit, along with the accompanying online module, discusses baseline data and information and how it can help with the target-setting process. For a link to the resources, please see page 15. It is important to note that the elements included (knowledge/skills, baseline data/information, targets and assessments) in the three essential questions are Download 0,87 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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